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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 22, 2025

Capturing Dynamic Finger Gesturing with High-resolution Surface Electromyography and Computer Vision
08:15

Capturing Dynamic Finger Gesturing with High-resolution Surface Electromyography and Computer Vision

Published on: March 28, 2025

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Continuous reach-to-grasp motion recognition based on an extreme learning machine algorithm using sEMG signals.

Cristian D Guerrero-Mendez1,2, Alberto Lopez-Delis3, Cristian F Blanco-Diaz4,5

  • 1Faculty of Mechanical, Electronics and Biomedical Engineering, Antonio Nariño University (UAN), Bogota D.C, Colombia. crguerrero69@uan.edu.co.

Physical and Engineering Sciences in Medicine
|July 2, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new machine learning algorithm using Extreme Learning Machine (ELM) effectively identifies user intentions in reach-to-grasp movements from surface Electromyography (sEMG) signals. This advancement promises improved control for prosthetic limbs and rehabilitation devices.

Keywords:
Continuous classesExtreme learning machines (ELM)Hand motor tasksMyoelectric controlObject manipulation

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Area of Science:

  • Rehabilitation Engineering
  • Biomedical Signal Processing
  • Machine Learning Applications

Background:

  • Recognizing user intention in reach-to-grasp motions is crucial for advanced rehabilitation engineering.
  • Surface Electromyography (sEMG) offers a viable, non-invasive method for capturing motor control signals.
  • Existing methods face challenges in accurately interpreting complex, continuous movements.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop and evaluate a Machine Learning (ML) algorithm based on Extreme Learning Machine (ELM) for identifying motor actions during continuous reach-to-grasp movements.
  • To explore various feature extraction techniques and their impact on ELM performance.
  • To compare the proposed ELM method against conventional ML classifiers.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized surface Electromyography (sEMG) data from an openly available dataset of 12 participants performing continuous reach-to-grasp movements.
  • Implemented an Extreme Learning Machine (ELM) model incorporating feature extraction from time-domain and autoregressive models.
  • Investigated parameters including neuron size, time windows, feature sets, and inter-subject variability, comparing performance against five standard ML classifiers.

Main Results:

  • The ELM-based method achieved high performance metrics: Accuracy >85%, F-score >90%, Recall >85%, and Area Under the Curve ~84%.
  • Computational cost (compilation time) was exceptionally low, under 1 ms, significantly outperforming conventional methods (p<0.05).
  • Analysis revealed specific trends in performance related to task identification and temporal dynamics during continuous movements.

Conclusions:

  • The developed ELM-based approach accurately identifies continuous reach-to-grasp intentions from myoelectric data.
  • The method's efficiency and high performance suggest significant potential for practical applications in Human-Machine Interface (HMI) control.
  • This research paves the way for more effective upper limb prosthetics and real-time rehabilitation, enhancing activities of daily living and quality of life.